Photosystem II function and integrity in spite of ... - ACS Publications

May 19, 1992 - Hadar Kless,* *'* Wim F. J. Vermaas,8 and Marvin Edelman*. Department of Plant Genetics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 76100 ...
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Biochemistry 1992,31, 11065-1 1071

11065

Photosystem I1 Function and Integrity in Spite of Drastic Protein Changes in a Conserved Region of the D2 Protein? Hadar Kless,'J Wim F. J. Vermaas,f and Marvin Edelmant Department of Plant Genetics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot. 76100 Israel, and Department of Botany and Center for the Study of Early Events in Photosynthesis, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1601 Received May 19,1992;Revised Manuscript Received August 28, I992

ABSTRACT: D1 and D2 are structurally related proteins forming the core of the photosystem I1 reaction center. The two proteins have several loop regions including an extended stroma-exposed loop between transmembrane helix D and parallel helix de. This loop (the D-de loop) is phylogenetically conserved in both proteins. The role of the D-de loop in photosystem I1 was studied in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 by constructing a chimeric D2 protein in which the stroma-exposed loop of D1 replaced that of D2. In one of the transgenic lines, a single-base deletion shifted the reading frame of the chimeric gene leading to loss of D2 accumulation and photosystem I1 assembly. Selection for spontaneous reversion to photoautotrophy yielded several suppressor mutants, five of which were analyzed. In all, further frameshifts in the inserted loop piece restored the original reading frame allowing readthrough to the normal carboxy terminus. However, the sequences in the restored D-de loop varied widely among the mutants. Changes ranged from a deletion of one amino acid residue to an insertion of 31, while the net charge of the D-de loop increased by up to 12 units. Mutant electron transfer rates and photoautotrophic growth were only mildly affected as compared to wild type. Nevertheless, in all mutants, the hydropathy profile of the stroma-exposed D-de loop region maintained its hydrophilic character including turns in similar locations. We conclude that the stromaexposed, D-de loop of the D2 protein can accommodate drastic composition and size changes without extensive functional consequences in photosystem 11. Hydrophilicity appears to be the major structural information encoded in this region.

The current model for the photosystem I1 (PSII) reaction center supposes a heterodimer arrangement of the D1 and D2 proteins, with accompanying chromophores and cofactors symmetrically oriented in the photosynthetic membrane [reviewed by Mattoo et al. (1989) and Vermaas and Ikeuchi (1991)l. The model (Trebst, 1986) is based on the highresolution crystal structure of the functionally-homologous reaction center proteins L and M in anoxygenic purple bacteria (Michel & Deisenhofer, 1988). The sequences of D1 and D2 are extended at several locations as compared to the bacterial L and M subunits which may correspond to unique features of PSII. One such location faces the stroma and connects between transmembrane helix D and parallel helix de of both the D1 and D2 proteins. This region is termed the D-de loop. The D-de loop of the D1 protein (residues 225-250) is in and PSII-herbicide the vicinity of the secondary quinone (QB) binding niche (Dostatni et al., 1988), while in D2, the D-de loop (residues 224-248) is near the binding pocket of the primary quinone (QA). Major D1 and D2 trypsinization sites are present in the D-de loop (Marder et al., 1984; Geiger et al., 1987). Application of PSII herbicides known to displace Qe from its binding niche on D1 retards trypsinization of both This research was funded in part by grants from the Israeli Ministry of Science and Technology and the European Economic Community (to M.E.), the ForchheimerCenter for MolecularGenetics at the Weizmann Institute of Science (to M.E.), and the National Science Foundation (DCB 90-58279 to W.V.). This is publication no. 126 from the Center for the Early Events in Photosynthesisat Arizona State University. The Center is funded by U S . Department of Energy Grant DE-FG 02-88 ER 13969 as part of the USDA/DOE/NSF Plant Science Centers Program. * Address correspondence to this author at the following present address: Departmentof Botany and Center for the Study of Early Events in Photosynthesis, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1601. Weizmann Institute of Science. Arizona State University.

0006-2960/92/043 1-11065$03.00/0

proteins and has been interpreted to indicate a contact site between the two in this region (Trebst, 1991). The D-de loop of D1 was proposed as the site of primary cleavage of D1 during light-dependentdegradationof the protein (Greenberg et al., 1987). Loop regions in proteins often are involved in binding and recognition at surface areas as exemplified by those in DNAbinding proteins and immunoglobulins (Pabo & Sauer, 1984; Mariuzza et al., 1987). Exposed loop regions are generally flexible and mobile and can accommodate sequence modifications although they tend to adopt particular conformations (Thornton et al., 1988; Chothia et al., 1989). The D-de loop region of the D1 and D2 proteins are twice as long in PSII as in bacterial reaction centers and are presumed to be exposed to the stromal, rather than lumenal side of the photosynthetic membrane (Michel & Deisenhofer, 1988). The D-de loops of D1 and D2 are each highly conserved phylogenetically, 18 of 25 residues being identical among 27 published sequences of D1 and the same number among 15 sequences of D2 (Svensson et al., 1991). Yet, there is less than 30% sequence homology between the loops of the two proteins suggesting particular roles for each. We used Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 to engineer an exchange of an 18 amino acid stretch of the D-de loop of D1 for the comparable loop region of D2. This appears to lead to a relatively normal photoautotrophicphenotype. However, among the resulting transformants, one was found that lacked PSII activity. This mutant had a one-base deletion inpsbDI, leading to an altered reading frame. From this mutant, photoautotrophic pseudorevertants were isolated. Analysis of these strains revealed additional shifts in that gene region (intragenic suppression) which result in dramatic changes in composition, length, and net charge of the &de loop in the D2 protein. This indicates that extensive sequence alterations 0 1992 American Chemical Society

11066 Biochemistry, Vol, 31, No. 45, 1992

Kless et al. ~~

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Table I: List of Oligonucleotides oligonucleotide sequence'

I II Ill

IV

v

VI VI1 Vlll IX X XI XI1

CACCCTGTTTmGAAGATGGG CGAAACCACCGAAGTTGAATCCCAGAACTACGG TTACAAATTCGG~CAAGAAGAAG~CCTAC~ S;BTGGAGTAGGTTTCTTCTTCTTG~CCGAATTTGT AACCGTAGTTCTGGGATTCAACTTCGGTGGTTTCG GCAGTCGGATC;CGCCCCAG GAGCGTTUCACGGGGGAG GCGGGAATZTCCGGTTCA GGCCCGAAGGTTCAAGGC GGTTCCACAACTGGACTT CGCTTGTTGGAGAAAGCA CGTAGCTCCTGGGAGA CCGTATTCTTGATCTACCC GGATTAATTCTCTAGACTC

corresponding gene positionb

restriction site modificationc

pSbDl 660-678

Nnrl

PSbAll 677-738

Nrul ;Haell I;Ncol

PSbAll 677-738 pSbDl 10-28 pSbDl 1054-1036 pSbDl 526-544 psbDl 885-868 psbDl 560-577 pSbDl 777-794 pSbDl 895-911 psbAlI 467-485 psbAll 1245-1227

Ncol;Hael II;Nnrl

BanMl Hincll EcoRl Hindlll

0 Oligonucleotides are listed in a 5' to 3' direction. Numbering for psbDI is according to Williams and Chisholm (1987) and forpsbAII is according to Ravnikar et al. (1989). Restriction site modifications are underlined and listed from left to right. (Not all modifications were utilized in this study).

in a highly conserved protein region only mildly affect basic PSII function. The hydrophilic character of the &de loop was maintained in all of the modified D2 proteins.

MATERIALS AND METHODS Strains and Growth Conditions. Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 cells were grown in BG-11 medium (Williams, 1988). The wild type strain for these studies lackspsbDI1, which was replaced by a spectinomycin-resistancecartridge, and contains a kanamycin-resistance cartridge downstream of psbDI/C (Vermaas et al., 1990a). psbDI/C carrying site-directed mutations was introduced along with the kanamycin-resistance cartridge into the above wild type to obtain the mutant line D2-1*. Mutant cultures were maintained on plates in the presence of 20 pg/mL spectinomycin and 10 pg/mL kanamycin. Five millimolar glucose and 20 pM atrazine were added to maintain PSII-independent photoheterotrophic growth. Liquid cultures were grown in 250-mL flasks containing 40 mL of medium on a gyratory shaker (100 rpm) at 30 OC and 50 pE.m-2.s-1 fluorescent light. Cell density was measured at 730 nm by diluting cultures to an OD of